Andromeda Jazmon will be doing her fourth year in a row of haiga (original haiku + her photos) at A Wrung Sponge.

Janelle at Brimful Curiosities will host a National Poetry Month Kids Poetry Challenge in which kids are invited to create pictures for the poems she posts each Friday. Check it out.

Biblio File will be featuring a poem or review of a novel-in-verse every day in April.

Anastasia Suen has set up a blog and a Twitter account for students (of all ages) to write Haiku (about what they learned at school that day).

Tricia Stohr-Hunt will host a Poetry in the Classroom series, which will highlight a topic, theme, poet, or book and talk about uses in the classroom at the Miss Rumphius effect blog.

Stasia Kehoe will be including poetry links, a giveaway of signed arc of the debut YA verse novel, Audition, plus reviews every Thursday of verse novels at Writer on the Side.

The Poem Farm will introduce a different poem idea-strategy or poetic technique for children and teachers every day. Each idea-strategy/ Technique will be followed by links to a few poems from this past year. The blog will also feature poem sharing ideas through "Poetry Peeks" into classrooms.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Her appendix burst Friday and they operated. Now she's home (in the living room where the TV and computer are, naturally) where she is trying to recover.

The hospital has cable and we don't, so she was watching as much cable as she could while there. (I think we overdosed on Nick and Disney channel.) Here she's stuck with watching DVDs, poor deprived kid.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Well, I've reached the halfway mark in my first semester at Vermont College of Fine Arts. I just sent Packet 3 to my Advisor. This is supposed to be our most difficult packet to complete, although others say that Packet 4 is the hardest.

We

shall

see.

One nice thing is that I think I now have a couple more picture books and picture book biographies almost completed. Once I have a free moment (what's that?), I'll see about sending them out to publishers. Hurrah, I'm creating again.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

As you may (or may not) know, this week is National Library Week. In celebration of this (AND to celebrate National Poetry Month), blogger Tina Nicholas Coury has an interview of Ann Wagner, youth Librarian for the Santa Monica Public Library Main Branch.

Monday, April 11, 2011

My writer friend, Katie Davis, periodically posts podcasts (which she calls, Brainburps) on her blog. For National Library Week she has a real goodie. She describes it like this:

"On Monday (today) I'll be posting my Library Love episode - an homage - for Library week. In it I have the authors below talking about how libraries or librarians did great things for them as children, and how it helped them grow into authors.There are songs, jokes (Mordicai Gerstein tells one that cracks me up every time) and it's just a great homage to librarians, who are so slammed right now."

So click on over and enjoy. Or, if you want to tweet it, please use the hashtag #LibraryLove.

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

This biography of Louis Armstrong seems to be narrated in a conversational tone by the very first horn he played.Since I also have had a biography of Louis Armstrong published, and this book has been placed in the biography area of libraries by Library of Congress catalogers, naturally I was immediately upset at how it seemed to break some basic rules of writing biographies.

With a talking horn, the book seems to be more fiction/ fantasy than real biography -- especially because it also seems as if the author has inserted a lot of made-up conversations and thoughts. However, when I checked the bibliography in the back of the book, I noticed one book that had not been published when I was writing my own biography of Armstrong.It’s possible that the author got these quotes and thoughts from that collection of Armstrong’s words.However, without footnotes, the reader can’t tell what is true from what is made up.I also noticed a few mistakes.For instance -- Armstrong didn’t blow a ‘toy’ horn while working on the Karnofsky’s rag cart.It was a long ‘tin’ horn.A perfectly decent horn used by peddlers and carriages to warn pedestrians that they were coming through.

The author is an award winning poet who uses language brilliantly, but I can’t help but wonder if the conversational, jazzy language the horn is supposedly using is anything like that spoken among jazz fans in New Orleans.“Louis’ heart cracked like an old clamshell.”Lovely use of words, but since there aren’t clams in the Gulf, would a New Orleans’ horn use such a simile?Actually the writer overuses similies on every page.

Remember earlier when I talked about historical fiction versus true nonfiction? Well, this is the book that I found so disturbing. Once you've read this book, I'd love for you to come back and let me know what you think. -wO

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

I've been inspired by the book, As Always, Julia (letters from Julia Child) to include more food in my blog entries.

Yesterday, while the weather was sunny and almost 80 degrees, the 11-year-old wanted to have a picnic. So, she set up the picnic towel near the bench at the end of our yard. While I cooked hamburgers, she prepared a relish dish (attacking the celery stalks with karate chops of the knife), and we all carried our food out there.

It was lovely. She lay back on the picnic towel (a huge towel with its own carry handles) while we ate sitting on the bench. We talked about the plants and trees at this end of the yard -- what used to be there and what's growing there now -- and simply had a lovely time.

Then the clouds rolled in, signifying the approaching cold front and rain that poured last night.

I think I should have titled this post -- making memories with kids. Or simply, making memories, because we'll always remember this picnic.